Steve Carell

What Does a Funny Guy Do Besides Work at the Office? Wrangle Wild Animals in the New Movie Evan Almighty—and Answer Your Questions Too!

Steve Carell will do anything for a laugh—this is a guy who famously endured an on-camera chest-waxing in The 40-Year-Old Virgin. But nothing prepared him for having two live snakes slipped into his suit while filming his new Noah's Ark-themed comedy Evan Almighty. "The snakes that you see in the movie are CGI'd [computer-generated] because the real ones kept crawling down the back of my jacket," says the actor, 43. "These were, like, pythons—serious, big, nasty." How nasty? "He sprained his ankle jumping out of the car to get away from them," says director Tom Shadyac. "He had to go to the hospital." All in a day's work. Says Carell: "I did suffer for the art!"

Luckily, he can afford a good health plan. Two years ago, Virgin made the onetime convenience-store clerk a movie star. A turn as a suicidal Proust scholar in last year's comedy Little Miss Sunshine won him critical raves. And his role as inappropriate boss Michael Scott on NBC's hit comedy The Office earned him a Golden Globe last year and a loyal TV following. Still, no one is more shocked by all that success than Carell. "I was completely surprised by what has transpired in the last couple of years," says the Concord, Mass., native, who worked as a waiter at a Hard Rock Cafe during his years as a struggling actor. "I never would have anticipated it, and no one else did either. I thought I might eventually be the wacky neighbor on a sitcom."

The son of Edwin, an electrical engineer, and Harriet, a homemaker, Carell grew up the youngest of four boys in the Boston suburbs. After attending Denison University, he toyed with the idea of law school, but when an admissions form asked why he wanted to be an attorney, he found no answer and decided to pursue acting. Settling in Chicago, Carell performed with the Second City comedy troupe. There he met his wife, actress Nancy Walls, after she enrolled in an improv class he taught. "If I didn't have that perceived power and authority of being a teacher, there is no way I would have won over my wife," he told PEOPLE in '05. The couple live in Los Angeles with their children Elisabeth, 6, and John, 3. "I try to get home and give my kids a tub and put them to bed every night," says Carell. "I'm generally there in the morning to give them breakfast and to get them off to school."

Don't expect major movie stardom to change that. "If this movie tanks and my career is over, I will be okay," says Carell. "I could raise my kids and take jobs as they come. I could live with that, because I have had such a great run. I have tasted [fame] but it's not like it's done nothing but make me hungry for more. I have tasted it and I am very satisfied."

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Go Ahead and Ask!

Do you think your kids are funnier than you are? —MELINDA KOGUT, WAITSFIELD, VT. Yes, without a doubt. They already have a much drier sense of humor than I do. My 3-year-old understands irony, which I think is pretty sophisticated at age 3. So, I would say so.

If you could choose only two animals to put on your ark, what would they be? —LISA MOSER, FOREST LAKE, MINN. A cow and a chicken. And I would eat both of them in the course of 40 days.

What is your most embarrassing moment, the kind you learn a major life lesson from? —MAJEL MAES, EAST LANSING, MICH. In third grade, when I bought a box of candy for a girl in my class and I signed it, "From your secret admirer. I love you." And then everybody found out it was me, and I was the laughingstock of third grade. So that kind of did me in in terms of girls for quite some time.

Will you marry me? —SARA LEDERER, OAKLAND, CALIF. Yes. It doesn't matter that I am already married. I accept. I blanketly accept any marriage proposal.

When did you discover that you wanted to be an actor? —IRINA ZILBERBLYUM, NEW YORK CITY The first time was a first-grade play. I grew up in Massachusetts, so the Pilgrims were a big thing. It was the Pilgrims and the Indians. We were miming paddling in a canoe, in chairs, and I paddled on both sides of the canoe because I knew if you paddle on one side, you go in a circle. And the teacher pointed that out and said, "Did you see what Steve did? He used both sides." And that was the first time I was singled out in terms of anything and something snapped right then and there. So, I've been playing Native Americans ever since then.